Also spelled Catherine. Died at age 51. Pg 4. The old Carter Prayer Book says that Katharine Carter married John Lawson on the 16th of June 1703.spouse: >Tabb, (*1682 - )
1753: Served under command of Capt. Brian Fairfax in French + Indian War.spouse: >Morris, Judith (1706 - 1765)
[]spouse: >Morgan, Elizabeth (*1735 - 1803)1773 Thomas removed his family to Rye Cove River (Scott Cty) but they in Fincastle Cty. Mar 1774 he had a grant for 197 acres of land in the Cove and on Mar 31, a grant for 1420 acres to include his improvements. He was a justice of 1st court, May 9, 1780 and Lieut. in Militia. In 1788 he represented Russell Cty in the Constitutional Convention of that year. And is said to have been a menber of legislature several subsequently. Will probated in Russell, Oct. 25, 1803. Was there a son Elijah born 1810? Thomas? m. Matilda Elizabeth. She may have been Morgan as they had a son named Morgan + grandson named Thomas Morgin.
[]spouse: >Williamson, Arabella (1676 - 1737)Commissioned Captain Lancaster Militia April 7, 1711 by Gov. Sportswood. Took oath as Justice of Lancaster Ct. + served continuously until May 14, 1729. He was a planter + merchant + was connected with "King Carter of Corotoman in mercantil business. He was a good friend of "King" Carter. He is the ancestor to the William Carter family of the Fordsville section of Ohio Co., (KY?). Will dtd April 24, 1728. Probated Oct. 10, 1733.
In 1650/1652 Thomas came to Nansemond City, Virginia from London in the 'Safety', about the time Charles I was beheaded. Thomas appears at 22 years of age in the as paying tithes on himself + 4 servants. Thomas bought 800 acres in Lancaster City, on the eastern most branch of the Corotoman River from Col. John Carter. Col. John Carter was living in Nansemond City in 1649/50, when Thomas first arrived, but had since moved to Lancaster. Thomas, also, moved to Lancaster County, VA and purchased a large plantation on Rappahannock River, VA.spouse: >Dale, Katherine (1652 - 1703)Thomas Carver Senior served as commissioner of City in 1663, Deputy Clerk of City in 1663-65, and Burgess in 1667. Captain of the Lancaster Militia. W+M Qtrly 2nd Ser, possibly youngest son of parents. Vestryman in Christ Church + Saint Marys White Chapel. Occupation: Planter + Trader.
[]spouse: >Emmery, Ann (*1702 - 1634)Source: Johnnie Jo Dickensen Via Helen Lawrence P.O. Box 387 Hintsville, TX 77340
Historical Sketches, Presbyterian Churches and Early Settlers in N.E. Georgia by Reverend Groves Harrison Cartledge Compiled by Jessie Julia Mize and Virginia Louise Newton.spouse: >Lane, Annie Maria (*1823 - )... there are several mentions of Landers in the book.
Reverand Groves Harrison Cartledge's grandmother, Dilly Landers Page Cartledge Roberts Swann, was the daughter of Luke Landers, was married 4 times, had children by all, survived them all, and was died in Benton county AL in 1851, age 92. Luke had moved from NC to Columbia Co., GA, had five sons, six daughters, two sons moved to IN. Another son, John, was a Baptist minister. One daughter, Mary, married Henry Spaulding of Columbia County. Their daughter married Mark Manning, and was the mother of Rev Wm Manning, another Baptist minister. Dilly Landers second husband, Joseph Cartledge, grandfather of the author of the book, died early in 1795. Another mention of Landers is Merit Landers who married Harriet Thompson, daughter of William Thompson, who came to GA as a child in 1790, and was the son of Alexander Thompson, sr. They may have lived in Madison County (or rather the part of Wilkes which became the part of Elbert which became Madison).
Green Carver was the other grandfather of Mary Edna Bailey. Green was also a Confederate Soldier of the Civil War. He was a private in Company I. 7th Alabama Cavalry. Green Carver, also a Pickens County resident, would have been 33 years old in 1861. Green Carver donated the land for the Cemetery at Liberty Church, Pickens County. Green Carver and his wife Martha are buried at Liberty Church Cemetery, also the burial site of Mary Edna Bailey.spouse: >Powell, Lousia (1833 - )
The parents of Thomas Carver have not been documented, but there is strong circumstantial evidence that he was the eldest son of William Carver Senior. In 1779, Thomas Carver purchased 200 acres of land on Ghent's + Sergant's Creeks ( present-day Person County, N.C.) from the State of North Carolina, and he lived there until about 1806, when he sold his property and moved west, settling in Wilson County, Tennessee around 1807. he was married twice, the first time Probably in N. C. to Clara _____? who was born between 1755 + 1774 and probably died about 1806 before he moved on to Tennessee.spouse: >Clara, (*1752 - )On 22 December, 1807, he bought 100 acres on Cedar Lick Creek in Wilson County, Tennessee where he evidently settled and lived until his death. He remarried on 4 December, 1809 in Wilson County to Margaret (Motheral) Donelson, a widow of William Donelson. Surviving children of Thomas Carver were named in the 1821 estate settlement record: Thomas Jr., John, Caty, William, Benjamin, Isaac, and Elizabeth. Source from Keith Carver's Book.